There is a sacred truth that we often overlook in the noise of our modern world: the ancient principle of letting go.
We hold on so tightly to the things that weigh us down—the stories we’ve told ourselves for years, the fear we’ve accepted as truth, the excuses we use to delay our growth, the false identities we’ve wrapped around our worth. We cling to limitations as if they are part of us, but they’re not. They are illusions—fabricated walls built by past wounds, old beliefs, and the parts of us that are afraid to step fully into the light.
But what if you just let it go?
What if you released the fear, the separation from what you want, the resistance that says it has to be hard or take a long time? What if you dropped the weight of self-doubt, the fear of being seen, the stories that say you’re not ready or not enough?
Because here’s the truth: it’s not really the world around you holding you back—it’s the internal world within you. The way you see yourself. The thoughts you think. The energy you carry.
When you let go of the noise, when you drop the armor, when you finally stop gripping so tightly to what isn’t serving you, everything shifts.
You naturally elevate. You naturally dissolve the barriers between where you are and where you want to be. You remember who you are underneath it all.
Letting go isn’t about giving up. It’s about clearing space—for joy, for alignment, for truth, for expansion. It’s the most radical and beautiful form of self-trust.
I remember feeling like I was going to be a miserable teacher forever. I felt stuck, heavy, uninspired—trapped in a system that no longer felt like home. I had worked so hard to get there, and yet it felt like I was living someone else’s life. There were days I’d cry in my car, wondering how I could ever leave something so stable yet so misaligned. I asked myself the hard questions: Is this really it? Is this what I want my daughter to see when she looks at me?
If it weren’t for my daughter, I might have stayed. Stayed in the cycle. Stayed in the comfort of burnout. Stayed in the belief that it was too late to change. But I couldn’t let her grow up watching her mom be miserable forever. I couldn’t be the mom who didn’t live up to her potential, the mom who was only half in her own life.
She deserved to see her mom fully alive. And so did I.
So today, Kahli Made is your reminder to release what no longer serves you.
Let go. Let go of the fear. Let go of the story. Let go of the pressure.
And return to the version of you that already knows she’s worthy. Already knows she’s powerful. Already knows she’s capable of building a life that feels like home.
She’s still in there. And she’s ready.
All you have to do is let go.